The Federal Reserve has cut back its stimulus program by another $US10 billion ($11 billion) despite the recent US economic slowdown, which it has blamed ‘‘in part’’ on severe winter weather.

The Federal Open Market Committee reduced stimulus spending to $US55 billion a month, saying the broader economy has ‘‘sufficient underlying strength’’ to support continued improvement in the labour market.

But new Fed Chair Janet Yellen said that the central bank still did not foresee raising its base fed funds interest rate until next year, as long as unemployment remains too high and inflation is well-controlled.

‘‘We know we are not close to full employment,’’ she said.

"We have expressed a number of opinions about the likely path of rates. In particular, the committee has endorsed the view that it anticipates it will be a considerable period after the asset purchase program ends before it will be appropriate to begin to raise rates."

"And of course, on our present path, that is not utterly pre-said, we would be looking at next fall.

In a review of recent conditions and its monetary policy, the FOMC said growth had slowed during the winter months, and that the housing sector recovery remains slow.

Meanwhile it called indicators from the labour market ‘‘mixed’’ but said that they ‘‘on balance showed further improvement.’’

Despite the slower activity, the FOMC said that the cumulative progress in the economy and jobs market still justified another cutback to its bond purchase program, which it began tapering in December when it was $US85 billion a month.

But in a significant shift to policy, the FOMC jettisoned the two specific numbers for unemployment and inflation that it set in December 2012 as thresholds for weighing a rate increase, saying the numerical thresholds no longer served policy communication.

The FOMC revised its forward guidance on rates to a more qualitative basis, Yellen said, ‘‘to better reflect conditions as they now stand, and are likely to evolve over coming quarters.’’

The change came after the official unemployment rate, 6.7 per cent last month, had neared the official threshold of 6.5 per cent even while the FOMC saw the economy as not yet ready for higher rates.The Federal Reserve meanwhile cut back slightly its economic growth forecast for this year and next, but said the unemployment rate would fall faster than it forecast in December.

The Fed said the economy was expected to grow 2.8-3.0 per cent in 2014 and 3.0-3.2 per cent in 2015.Those figures took 0.2 percentage points off the high end of the range for both years.

But the Fed also forecast that the unemployment rate would drop to 6.1-6.3 per cent this year - compared with the previous 6.3-6.6 per cent range estimate - and to 5.6-5.9 per cent in 2015. It left its view of inflation largely unchanged, saying it could be as high as 1.6 per cent this year and 2.0 per cent next.